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Next 10 Exits : Reflections on Race and Resilience in Vallejo, California

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Product Code: 9781943301010
ISBN13: 9781943301010
Condition: New
$19.08

Next 10 Exits : Reflections on Race and Resilience in Vallejo, California

$19.08
 
Trauma + Cultural Pride = Art of HealingAccording to the 2010 Census, Vallejo, California has the most racially diverse zip codes in the U.S. As a third-generation Korean Chinese American growing up in 1960s-1980s Vallejo, my lenses have been shaped by race and resilience. Now-defunct Mare Island Naval Shipyard brought good paying work during World War II; this was why so many different racial and ethnic groups lived in this small city, current population of 122,000. As a health professional and professor, I discuss adverse childhood experiences or ACES; early childhood trauma can influence an individual's overall health during their lifetime. Vallejo has had three hospitals since the early 20th Century. Because of the military presence, physical rehabilitation through Kaiser Hospital has been historic. After the closing of the Naval Shipyard, hospitals are the largest employers in Vallejo. The flip side of trauma can be healing or trauma-informed art. Ernest J. Gaines, author of "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman," lived much of his life in Vallejo. Perhaps that is why so many hip-hop artists E-40, Baby Bash, SOB x RBE, R & B artist, H.E.R., plus athletes C.C. Sabathia, C.J. Anderson, and Natalie Coughlin are Vallejoans. "Strength through Diversity" is on a plaque at the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum, yet our current society is much more segregated than during my youth. The ten exits in Vallejo are memory markers of the intersections of race and resilience of each of the four racial groups which are almost equally divided to comprise approximately 25% of Vallejo: African American, Asian American/Pacific Islander, Latinx, and White populations. Those ten exits from the I-80 Freeway East, serve as historical markers of growing up in 1960s to the 1980s in Vallejo. The author identifies as an Asian American who is not on the Black-White Dichotomy of how Race is often discussed. She offers essays, poems, paintings, and drawings which deal with identity, race, health disparities, and making art as a survival skill in navigating challenges as a person of color in the U.S.


Author: Elizabeth Ching
Publisher: Rabbit Roar
Publication Date: Mar 01, 2024
Number of Pages: NA pages
Language: English
Binding: Paperback
ISBN-10: 1943301018
ISBN-13: 9781943301010
 

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